Difference between revisions of "Epicureanism" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
m
 
(33 intermediate revisions by 11 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
:''Epicure redirects here.''.
+
{{2Copyedited}}{{Ebcompleted}}{{Copyedited}}{{Paid}}{{Approved}}{{Images OK}}{{Submitted}}
  
'''Epicureanism''' is a system of philosophy based upon the teachings of [[Epicurus]] (c. 340–c. 270 B.C.E.), and was one of the the most popular schools of [[Hellenistic philosophy]] (together with [[Platonism]] and [[Stoicism]] ). It was founded around 307 B.C.E., when Epicurus began to teach. He proposed that the ultimate goal of human life was happiness, and that the greatest good was to seek modest pleasures in order to attain a state of tranquility and freedom from fear through knowledge ("ataraxia") as well as absence of pain ("aponia"). He also encouraged the study of science as a way to overcome fear and ignorance and thus achieve mental calmness. Epicurus developed a [[ntualism|natualist]] explanation of existence combined with a system of ethics meant to guide society towards peace and tranquility. He deveoped [[atomism|atomist]] [[onotolgy]], [[empiricism|empiricist]] [[epistemology]], and [[humanism|humanistic]] [[ethics]]. Epicurus set up several communities which tried to lead a philosophical life according to his ethics. The Epicurean school remained active for several centuries and some of its teachings played a role in the [[Renaissance]] and influenced modern thinkers, particularly in the areas of civic [[justice]] and the study of [[physics]]. Although the modern terms “epicure” and “epicurean” imply self-indulgent [[hedonism]], Epicurus advocated moderation and pointed out that over-indulgence of any kind results in pain and therefore should be avoided.
+
[[Image:Epicurus bust.jpg|thumb|300px|Marble bust of [[Epicurus]]. [[Roman]] copy of [[Greek]] original, third century B.C.E./second century B.C.E. On display in the [[British Museum]], [[London]].]]
  
== History ==
+
'''Epicureanism''' is a system of [[philosophy]] based upon the teachings of [[Epicurus]] (c. 340–c. 270 B.C.E.), and was one of the most popular schools of [[Hellenistic philosophy]] (together with [[Platonism]] and [[Stoicism]]). It was founded around 307 B.C.E., when Epicurus began to teach. He proposed that the ultimate goal of human life was [[happiness]], and that the greatest good was to seek modest pleasures in order to attain a state of tranquility and [[freedom]] from [[fear]] through [[knowledge]] ("ataraxia") as well as absence of [[pain]] ("aponia"). He also encouraged the study of science as a way to overcome fear and ignorance and thus achieve mental calmness. Epicurus developed a [[naturalism|naturalist]] explanation of existence, combined with a system of [[ethics]] meant to guide society towards peace and tranquility. He put forth an [[atomism|atomist]] [[ontology]], [[empiricism|empiricist]] [[epistemology]], and [[humanism|humanistic]] ethics.
  
=== The School ===
+
Epicurus set up several communities that tried to lead a philosophical life according to his ethics. Epicureans grasped that sensuous pleasure is an important constituent of human happiness, but only when it is integrated with spiritual and ethical aspects, since all human experiences are essentially holistic spiritual-physical experiences. Although the modern terms “epicure” and “epicurean” imply self-indulgent [[hedonism]], Epicurus advocated [[moderation]] and pointed out that over-indulgence of any kind results in pain and therefore should be avoided.  
Epicurus set up his first Epicurean community in Mytilene, where he met Hermarchus, his first disciple and later his successor as head of the Athenian school. Threatened with imprisonment because of a dispute with a local official, he moved to Lampsacus ,where he met Metrodorus and Polyaenus, Metrodorus’ brother Timocrates, Leonteus and his wife Themista, the satirist Colotes, and Metrodorus’ sister Batis and her husband Idomeneus, and set up a second community. In the archonship of Anaxicrates (307 B.C.E.-306 B.C.E.), he returned to [[Athens]] where he formed The Garden (Ho Kepus), a school named for the house and garden he owned about halfway between the Stoa and the Academy that served as the school's meeting place.  An inscription on the gate to the garden is recorded by [[Seneca]] in his Epistle XXI, “Stranger, here you will do well to tarry; here our highest good is pleasure.”  Unlike the other Athenean schools of [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]], Epicurus’ school admitted women and slaves. These communities set out to live the ideal Epicurean lifestyle, detaching themselves from political society, and devoting themselves to philosophical discourse and the cultivation of friendship.  The letters which members of these communities wrote to each other were collected by later Epicureans and studied as a model of the philosophical life.
 
  
The most well-known Epicurean verse, which epitomizes his philosophy, is lathe biōsas λάθε βιώσας (Plutarchus De latenter vivendo 1128c; Flavius Philostratus Vita Apollonii 8.28.12), meaning "live secretly," (live without pursuing glory or wealth or power).  
+
Epicureanism remained popular for several centuries but never entered the mainstream of philosophical thought. One reason is that it was opposed by conservatives and later was suppressed by the [[Christianity|Christian]] faith. Much later, some of its teachings would play a role in the [[Renaissance]] and influence modern thinkers, particularly in the areas of civic [[justice]] and the study of [[physics]].  
  
The ''Tetrapharmacon'', preserved by [[Philodemus]], sums up the teachings of Epicurus: “The gods are not to be feared. Death is not a thing one must fear. Good is easy to obtain. Evil is easy to tolerate.
+
Epicureanism has contributed to modern thought in several important ways. One of these was the theory of “[[atomism]]” which was used by early physicists and chemists as they began to work out modern [[atomic theory]]. Epicureanism played a role in establishing the value of the individual when humanism arose as a backlash to religious authoritarianism. Another contribution was the idea that it is inherent in human nature to pursue happiness, and that an ethical society should allow every one of its members that opportunity. This idea was expanded on during the [[French Revolution]] and by thinkers like [[John Locke]]. The "pursuit of happiness" was incorporated into the United States [[Declaration of Independence]] as an inalienable right.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
Epicurean ethics continue to appeal. An ethical system based on maximizing "pleasure," similar to the tenet of [[utilitarianism]], seems to transcend barriers of [[culture]], [[faith]] and [[language]] at a time when the world is becoming a global community.  
  
In his will Epicurus left the house and garden and some funds to the trustees of the school, and upon his death, Hemarchus became his successor. He was followed by Polystratus, who was the last surviving member of the school to have personally known Epicurus. The Garden continued to exist in some form for several centuries, until all four Athenian schools were closed by the Emperor Justinian in 529 C.E..
+
== The School ==
 +
Epicurus set up his first Epicurean community in Mytilene, where he met Hermarchus, his first disciple and later his successor as head of the Athenian school. Threatened with imprisonment because of a dispute with a local official, he moved to Lampsacus, where he met Metrodorus and Polyaenus, Metrodorus’ brother Timocrates, Leonteus and his wife Themista, the satirist Colotes, and Metrodorus’ sister Batis and her husband Idomeneus, and set up a second community. In the archonship of Anaxicrates (307 B.C.E. - 306 B.C.E.), he returned to [[Athens]] where he formed The Garden (Ho Kepus), a school named for the house and garden he owned about halfway between the Stoa and the Academy that served as the school's meeting place. An inscription on the gate to the garden is recorded by [[Seneca]] in his Epistle XXI: “Stranger, here you will do well to tarry; here our highest good is pleasure.” Unlike the other Athenian schools of [[Plato]] and [[Aristotle]], Epicurus’ school admitted women and slaves. These communities set out to live the ideal Epicurean lifestyle, detaching themselves from political society, and devoting themselves to philosophical discourse and the cultivation of friendship. The letters, which members of these communities wrote to each other, were collected by later Epicureans and studied as a model of the philosophical life.  
  
=== Writings===
+
The ''Tetrapharmacon'', preserved by [[Philodemus]], sums up the teachings of Epicurus: “The gods are not to be feared. Death is not a thing one must fear. Good is easy to obtain. Evil is easy to tolerate.
Epicurus’ writing was said to fill 300 rolls, and at least 42 of his works, including the 37 books of ''On Nature'', were circulated at the time, as well as 12 books by Metrodorus and 4 by Polyaenus. Only fragments of Epicurus’s prolific manuscripts remain, including three epitomes (Letter to [[Herodotus]] on physics, Letter to Pythocles on astronomy, and the Letter to Menoeceus on ethics); a group of forty maxims, mostly on ethics; and papyrus fragments of his masterwork, ''On Nature''.  Many of the details of Epicurean philosophy come to us from [[doxographer]]s, secondary sources and the writings of later followers. In Rome, [[Titus Lucretius Carus]] (99 or 94-55 B.C.E.) was the school's greatest proponent, composing ''On the Nature of Things'', an epic poem, in six books, designed to recruit new members, which offers detailed instruction on several Epicurean theories, including atomism, infinity, [[mortality]], fear of death, fear of the gods, and sensation and the torments of desire. Epicureanism came under attack from [[Cicero]], whose critiques of Epicurean arguments actually served to preserve them for posterity. Another major source of information is the Roman politician and amateur philosopher Cicero; although he was highly critical of Epicureanism, his writings repeated Epicurean arguments in detail and preserved them for posterity. An ancient source is Diogenes of Oenoanda  (c. 2 C.E.) who composed a large inscription in stone at Oenoanda in Lycia.  
 
  
A library, dubbed the Villa of the Papyri, in Herculaneum, owned by [[Julius Caesar]]'s father-in-law, Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus, was preserved by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 C.E., and was found to contain a large number of works by [[Philodemus]], a late Hellenistic Epicurean, and Epicurus himself, attesting to the school's enduring popularity more than 300 years after his death. The task of unrolling and deciphering the charred papyrus scrolls, begun in the 1700s, continues today.
+
In his will Epicurus left the house and garden and some funds to the trustees of the school, and upon his death, Hemarchus became his successor. Polystratus, who was the last surviving member of the school to have personally known Epicurus, followed him. The Garden continued to exist in some form for several centuries, until all four Athenian schools were closed by the Emperor Justinian in 529 C.E.
 
=== Later Epicureanism ===
 
Epicureanism grew in popularity and it became, along with [[Stoicism]] and [[Skepticism]], one of the three dominant schools of Hellenistic philosophy, maintaining a strong following  until the late [[Roman Empire]].  It never entered the mainstream of ancient political life, partly because it was highly critical of everything that did not advance the “greater good” according to Epicureanism.  However it continued to be an important influence for several centuries.
 
 
Epicureans of the 2nd century B.C.E. include Demetrius of Lacon, and [[Apollodorus]], who wrote 400 books.  His disciple, [[Zeno of Sidon]], also wrote prolifically and was heard by Cicero in Athens in 79 B.C.E.  Phaedrus, another of Cicero’s teachers, was in Rome in 90 B.C.E., and Patro was head of the school until 51 B.C.E.
 
 
 
Surviving fragments of a 1st century B.C.E. treatise, On Signs, by Philodemus, show that there were sophisticated debates on induction between Epicureans and Stoics.  The first person to write about Epicureanism in [[Latin]] was Amafinius. Titus Lucretius Carus wrote ''On the Nature of Things'' during the 1st century B.C.E.  Epicureanism became well-established in Italy in the 1st century AD, under the patronage of Roman aristocrats. After the assassination of Julius Caesar, Epicureanism became unpopular among the Roman governmental elite, but flourished in other parts of the Roman Empire, such as [[Turkey]], where in the 2nd century AD, Diogenes of Oenoanda carved Epicurean texts on a stone wall.  Fragments of a polemic against the Stoic [[Chrysippus]] by Diogenianus, another Epicurean of the 2nd century AD, are found in ''The History of the Church'' by Eusebius (263-339 C.E.).
 
 
 
Epicurus' theory that the gods were unconcerned with human affairs had always clashed strongly with the [[Judeo-Christian tradition|Judeo-Christian]] concept of a [[monotheism|monotheistic]] [[God]], and the philosophies were essentially irreconcilable. In [[Talmud]]ic literature, the word for a heretic is "Apikouros". Epicureanism was routinely attacked in Christian texts of the mid-2nd century AD. Lactantius criticizes Epicurus at several points throughout his ''Divine Institutes''. After the [[Emperor Constantine]] declared Christianity an official religion of the Roman Empire in the 3rd century AD, Epicureanism was suppressed.  For several centuries the only fragments of Epicureanism to be remembered in Europe were those that the church chose to preserve. In the 15th century, intellectuals began to take an interest in the [[Greek and Roman classics]], and [[Italian humanism|Italian humanists]] began circulating translations of classical works.  In 1414, Poggio Bracciolini rediscovered Lucretius’ epic, ''On the Nature of Things'', in a German [[monastery]] and sent a copy to Italy. It was published in 1473, after the invention of the printing press.
 
 
 
Epicureanism was revived as a philosophical thought system in the 17th century by [[Pierre Gassendi]], who constructed a neo-Epicurean atomism to challenge [[Descartes]]’ theories. Gassendi’s works influenced several English intellectuals, including [[John Locke]], [[Isaac Newton]], Robert Boyle and Robert Hooke.  Epicurean ideas helped lay the foundations for the theory of modern [[physics]], [[chemistry]] and [[astronomy]], and contributed to classical [[liberalism]] in [[political theory]] and atomistic empiricism in philosophy.  Newton included 90 lines from ''On the Nature of Things'' in his writings on the concept of inertia. The transition, during the Period of [[Enlightenment]], from [[superstition]], [[alchemy]], and political and religious [[authoritarianism]] to [[modern science]] and physics, [[religious freedom]] and [[democracy]], owes a great deal to the teachings of Epicurus.
 
 
 
Epicurus was one of the first thinkers to develop the notion of [[justice]] as a [[social contract]]. He defined justice as an agreement "neither to harm nor be harmed." The point of living in a society with laws and [[punishment]]s is to be protected from harm so that one is free to pursue happiness. Because of this, laws that do not help contribute to promoting human happiness are not just. This was later picked up by the [[democracy|democratic]] thinkers of the [[French Revolution]], and others, like [[John Locke]], who wrote that people had a right to "life, liberty, and property." To Locke, one's own body was part of their [[property]], and thus one's right to property would theoretically guarantee safety for their [[person]]s, as well as their possessions. This triad was carried forward into the American freedom movement and [[Declaration of Independence]], by American founding father, [[Thomas Jefferson]], as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."  Jefferson was an avowed Epicurean in his later years, and set out his views in his ''Letter to William Short''.
 
 
 
[[Karl Marx's]] doctoral thesis was on "The Difference Between the Democritean and Epicurean Philosophy of Nature." [1] Epicurus was also a significant source of inspiration and interest for [[Friedrich Nietzsche]]. Nietzsche cites his affinities to Epicurus in a number of his works, including ''The Gay Science'', ''Beyond Good and Evil'', and his private letters to Peter Gast.  
 
  
Epicurus' doctrines continue to have a general appeal to modern intellectuals, as evidenced by a recent revival of Epicurean-oriented individualism in political and philosophical thought, as well as in pop culture.
+
== Writings==
 +
Epicurus’ writing was said to fill 300 rolls, and at least 42 of his works, including the 37 books of ''On Nature'', were circulated at the time, as well as 12 books by Metrodorus and four by Polyaenus. Only fragments of Epicurus’s prolific manuscripts remain, including three epitomes (Letter to [[Herodotus]] on [[physics]], Letter to Pythocles on [[astronomy]], and the Letter to Menoeceus on [[ethics]]); a group of forty maxims, mostly on ethics; and papyrus fragments of his masterwork, ''On Nature''. Many of the details of Epicurean philosophy come to us from [[doxographer]]s—secondary sources and the writings of later followers. In Rome, [[Titus Lucretius Carus]] (99 or 94-55 B.C.E.) was the school's greatest proponent, composing ''On the Nature of Things'', an epic poem, in six books, designed to recruit new members, which offers detailed instruction on several Epicurean theories, including atomism, infinity, [[mortality]], fear of death, fear of the gods, and sensation and the torments of desire. Epicureanism came under attack from [[Cicero]], whose critiques of Epicurean arguments actually served to preserve them for posterity. An ancient source is Diogenes of Oenoanda (c. 2 C.E.) who composed a large inscription in stone at Oenoanda in Lycia.  
  
== Teachings ==
+
A library, dubbed the Villa of the Papyri, in Herculaneum, owned by [[Julius Caesar]]'s father-in-law, Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus, was preserved by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 C.E., and was found to contain a large number of works by [[Philodemus]], a late Hellenistic Epicurean, and Epicurus himself, attesting to the school's enduring popularity more than 300 years after his death. The task of unrolling and deciphering the charred papyrus scrolls, begun in the 1700s, continues today.
  
===  Atomism  ===
+
== Epicureanism in Greek and Roman periods ==
Epicurus' teachings represented a departure from the other major Greek thinkers of his period, and before, but was nevertheless founded on the atomism of  Democritus. Everything that exists is either “body” or “space,” and both are infinite.  Space includes absolute void, without which motion would not be possible.  Body is made up of tiny indivisible particles, atoms, which can be further analyzed as sets of absolute “minima.”  Atoms have only the primary properties of size, shape and weight, while secondary properties like color are generated by combinations of atoms.  Atoms are constantly moving at a rapid pace, but large groups of atoms form stable compounds by falling into regular patterns of movement governed by three principles: weight (natural movement of falling in a straight line), collision (forced movement resulting from impact) and a “swerve,” or random free motion. This “swerve” initiates new patterns of movement and prevents determinism.  Our world, and any other worlds that exist, is one of these complex groups of atoms, generated by chance.  Everything that occurs is the result of the atoms colliding, rebounding, and becoming entangled with one another, with no purpose or plan behind their motions. Our world is not the creation of a divine will, and the gods are seen as ideal beings and models of ideal life, uninvolved with the affairs of man. Epicurus limited the number of sensible qualities by making the number of forms of the atoms finite, and to prevent combinations of atoms form resulting in infinite sensible qualities he developed a law of universal equilibrium of all the forces, or “isonomy.
+
Epicureanism grew in popularity and it became, along with [[Stoicism]] and [[Skepticism]], one of the three dominant schools of Hellenistic philosophy, maintaining a strong following until the late [[Roman Empire]]. It never entered the mainstream of ancient political life, partly because it was highly critical of everything that did not advance the “greater good” according to Epicureanism. However it continued to be an important influence for several centuries.  
 
   
 
   
=== Epistemology===
+
Epicureans of the second century B.C.E. include Demetrius of Lacon, and [[Apollodorus]], who wrote 400 books. His disciple, [[Zeno of Sidon]], also wrote prolifically and was heard by Cicero in Athens in 79 B.C.E. Phaedrus, another of Cicero’s teachers, was in Rome in 90 B.C.E., and Patro was head of the school until 51 B.C.E.
The Epicurean Canon, or rule (from a work, “On the Criterion, or Canon”) held that all sensations and representations (aesthêsis) are true and are one of three criteria of truth, along with the basic feelings of pleasure and pain (pathê), and prolepsis (concepts, or “a recollection of what has often been presented from without”).   It is only when we begin to apply judgement to these criteria that error can occur. Using these three criteria we can infer the nature of a remote or microscopic object or phenomenon. If both prolepsis (naturally acquired concepts) and a number of examples from experience provide the same evidence that something is true, we are entitled to believe it true, on the grounds of “ouk antimarturesis” (lack of counter-evidence).
+
[[File:Lucretius, De rerum natura.jpg|thumb|300px|''De rerum natura'' manuscript]]
 +
Surviving fragments of a first century B.C.E. treatise, ''On Signs'', by Philodemus, show that there were sophisticated debates on induction between Epicureans and Stoics. The first person to write about Epicureanism in [[Latin]] was Amafinius. Titus Lucretius Carus wrote ''De rerum natura'' (''On the Nature of Things'') during the first century B.C.E. Epicureanism and became well established in Italy in the first century C.E., under the patronage of Roman aristocrats. After the assassination of [[Julius Caesar]], Epicureanism became unpopular among the Roman governmental elite, but flourished in other parts of the Roman Empire, such as [[Turkey]], where in the second century C.E., Diogenes of Oenoanda carved Epicurean texts on a stone wall. Fragments of a polemic against the Stoic [[Chrysippus]] by Diogenianus, another Epicurean of the second century C.E., are found in ''The History of the Church'' by Eusebius (263-339 C.E.).
  
Epicurus concluded that the soul must be a body, made up of four types of atoms and consisting of two parts: one distributed through the physical body and able to experience physical sensations; and a separate part, the psyche, located in the chest, which is the seat of thought, emotion and will.  Thin films continuously issue from all bodies and reach the psyche through the pores. Thought occurs when the images constituted by these films are perceived by the psyche.  The psyche is free to continually seize only the images it needs from these films.  
+
Epicurus' theory that the gods were unconcerned with human affairs had always clashed strongly with the [[Judeo-Christian tradition|Judeo-Christian]] concept of a [[monotheism|monotheistic]] [[God]], and the philosophies were essentially irreconcilable. In [[Talmud]]ic literature, the word for a heretic is "Apikouros." Epicureanism was routinely attacked in Christian texts of the mid-second century C.E. Lactantius criticizes Epicurus at several points throughout his ''Divine Institutes''. With the growing dominance of [[Christianity]] when the Emperor [[Constantine]] declared it legal, and especially after Emperor [[Theodosius I]] declared it the official religion of the Roman Empire in the third century C.E., Epicureanism declined. For several centuries the only fragments of Epicureanism to be remembered in Europe were those that the church chose to preserve.
  
Sensual perception also takes place when the sense organs are hit by films of atoms issuing from the perceived object.
+
== Epicureanism Since Modern Times ==
 +
In the fifteenth century, intellectuals began to take an interest in the Greek and Roman classics, and [[Italy|Italian]] [[humanism|humanists]] began circulating translations of classical works. In 1414, Poggio Bracciolini rediscovered Lucretius’ epic, ''On the Nature of Things'', in a [[Germany|German]] [[monastery]] and sent a copy to Italy. It was published in 1473, after the invention of the [[printing press]].
  
=== Ethics ===
+
Epicureanism was revived as a philosophical thought system in the seventeenth century by [[Pierre Gassendi]], who constructed a neo-Epicurean atomism to challenge [[Descartes]]’ theories. Gassendi’s works influenced several English intellectuals, including [[John Locke]], [[Isaac Newton]], Robert Boyle, and Robert Hooke. Epicurean ideas helped lay the foundations for the theory of modern [[physics]], [[chemistry]] and [[astronomy]], and contributed to classical [[liberalism]] in [[political theory]] and atomistic empiricism in philosophy. Newton included 90 lines from ''On the Nature of Things'' in his writings on the concept of inertia. The transition, during the Period of [[Enlightenment]], from [[superstition]], [[alchemy]], and political and religious [[authoritarianism]] to [[modern science]] and physics, [[religious freedom]] and [[democracy]], owes a great deal to the teachings of Epicurus.
Epicurus’ philosophy is based on the principle that “all sensations are true.”  Sensations that cause pleasure are good and sensations that cause pain are bad.  The object of ethics is to determine the desired end, and the means necessary to achieve that end. Epicurus examined the animal kingdom and concluded that the ultimate end is “pleasure.”  He defined two types of pleasure; a “kinetic” pleasure that actively satisfies the receiving sense organ, and “static” pleasure which is the absence of pain.  Epicurus declared that“freedom from pain in the body and trouble in the mind” is the ultimate goal in achieving a happy life.
 
 
The modern-day terms “epicure” and “epicurean” imply extreme self-indulgence, but Epicurus was by no means a hedonist in the modern sense of the word. The highest pleasure, for both soul and body, is a satisfied state, “katastematic pleasure.”  Self-indulgence and the enjoyment of luxuries may affect this state, but do not increase or heighten it.  Instead, the effects of over-indulgence and the effort to accumulate wealth often lead to pain and vulnerability to fortune.  Man’s primary goal should be to minimize pain.  This can be accomplished for the body through a simple way of life which satisfies the basic physical needs, and this is relatively easy to obtain.  Pain of the soul can be minimized through the study of physics (science) which eliminates fear and ignorance.  Physical pain can be far outweighed by mental pleasure because it is temporary, while the pleasure of the mind ranges across time and space.
 
 
The members of Epicurus’ communities lived a simple life, eating barley bread  and drinking water, although a daily ration of half a pint of wine was allowed.  Epicurus taught that the way to achieve tranquility was to understand the limits of desire, and devoted considerable effort to the exploration of different types of desire.
 
  
=== Friendship ===
+
Epicurus was one of the first thinkers to develop the notion of [[justice]] as a [[social contract]]. He defined justice as an agreement "neither to harm nor be harmed." The point of living in a society with [[law]]s and [[punishment]]s is to be protected from harm so that one is free to pursue happiness. Because of this, laws that do not help contribute to promoting human happiness are not just. This was later picked up by the [[democracy|democratic]] thinkers of the [[French Revolution]], and others, like [[John Locke]], who wrote that people had a right to "life, liberty, and property." To Locke, one's own body was part of their [[property]], and thus one's right to property would theoretically guarantee safety for their [[person]]s, as well as their possessions. This triad was carried forward into the American freedom movement and [[Declaration of Independence]] by American founding father [[Thomas Jefferson]] as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Jefferson was an avowed Epicurean in his later years, and set out his views in his ''Letter to William Short''.
Another important component of happiness and satisfaction is friendship.  The world of Epicurus’ time was one of violence and war, and it was necessary to ensure security in order to achieve pleasure.  Epicurus advocated avoiding involvement with public life and the competition of society, to “live hidden.”  A system of civic justice is important as a contract among human beings to refrain from harmful activity in order to maintain society.  This contract is not absolute, but can be revised as changing circumstances demanded it. In addition it is necessary to enter into a private compact of friendship with like-minded individuals. This friendship, though entered into for utility, becomes a desirable source of pleasure in itself. Epicurus said, “for love of friendship one has even to put in jeopardy love itself,and that a wise man, “if his friend is put to torture, suffers as if he himself were there.
 
  
=== Death and Mortality ===
+
[[Karl Marx]]'s doctoral thesis was on "The Difference Between the Democritean and Epicurean Philosophy of Nature." Epicurus was also a significant source of inspiration and interest for [[Friedrich Nietzsche]]. Nietzsche cites his affinities to Epicurus in a number of his works, including ''The Gay Science'', ''Beyond Good and Evil'', and his private letters to Peter Gast.  
Epicurus recognized two great fears as causes of pain and mental anguish: fear of the gods and fear of death. He advocated the study of science to overcome these fears:  “If we were not troubled by our suspicions of the phenomena of the sky and about death, and also by our failure to grasp the limits of pain and desires, we should have no need for natural science.”  By using science to explain natural phenomena, it becomes clear that celestial  phenomena are acts of nature and not acts of vengeance by the gods, who are unconcerned with human affairs.  According to Epicurus, the soul and body  both dissolve after death.  There is no need to fear death while we are alive (and not dead), and once we die we cease to exist and can’t feel fear at all.  If we understand that pleasure is perfect at each instant in our lives, and cannot be accumulated, we can see that “infinite time contains no greater pleasure than limited time,” and therefore it is vain to desire immortality.
 
 
=== God and Religion ===
 
Epicurus was one of the first Greek philosophers to challenge the belief that the cosmos was ruled by a pantheon of gods and goddesses who arbitrarily intervened in human affairs.  He acknowledged the existence of the gods, but portrayed them as blissfully happy beings who would not disturb their tranquility by involving themselves in human affairs.  He taught the gods were not even aware of human existence, and that they should be regarded only as examples of ideal existence.  Epicurus saw “fear of the gods” as one of the great causes of mental anguish, and set out to overcome it by the study of science.  His atomist theories held that the universe was a chance conglomeration of atoms, without the direction of any divine will.  The Greeks believed the gods to be the cause of many “celestial phenomena,” such as storms, lightning strikes, floods and volcanic eruptions.  Epicurus  pointed out that there were natural explanations for all of these phenomena and that they should not be feared as the vengeance or punishment of the gods.
 
Epicurus was also one of the first philosophers to discuss the concept of evil, saying that a benevolent will could not be watching over a universe filled with such misery and contradiction.
 
  
Some early Greek critics accused Epicurus of acknowledging the existence of the gods only to protect himself from persecution and a fate similar to that of Socrates. Because it minimized the importance of the gods and denied the existence of an afterlife,  Epicureanism was viewed as anti-religious, first by the Greeks, then the Jews and Romans, and finally by the Christian church.
+
Epicurus' doctrines continue to have a general appeal to modern intellectuals, as evidenced by a recent revival of Epicurean-oriented [[individualism]] in political and philosophical thought, as well as in [[pop culture]]. [[Jeremy Bentham]] and others developed [[utilitarianism|utilitarianist]] ethical theory based upon the idea of maximizing pleasure. We can see conceptual affinity between Epicureanism and utilitarianism, one of the most popular ethics today.
  
=== Civic Justice ===
+
== References ==  
Epicurus developed a theory of justice as a contract among the members of a community “neither to harm or be harmed.”  Justice, like other virtues, has value only to the extent that it is useful to the community. Laws that do not contribute to the well-being of the community cannot be considered just.  Laws were needed to control the behavior of fools who might otherwise harm other members o f the community, and were to be obeyed because disobedience would bring about punishment, or fear of punishment, and therefore, mental and physical pain.
 
  
=== Free Will ===
+
* Annas, Julia. ''The Morality of Happiness''. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993. ISBN 0195096525
Epicurus’ writings about free will have been lost and a precise explanation of his theories is not available. He was very careful to avoid determinism in the construction of his atomic theory. In addition to the natural downward movement of atoms (weight or gravity) and the movement caused by collision, Epicurus introduced a third movement, the “swerve,” a random sideways movement. This “swerve” was necessary in order to explain why atoms began colliding in the first place, since without some kind of sideways movement all atoms would have just continued to travel downwards in parallel straight lines. It  also avoided the possibility that all future events were pre-determined the moment atoms began to move, preserving human freedom and liberating man from fate.
+
* Cooper, John M. “Pleasure and Desire in Epicurus.” In John M. Cooper, ''Reason and Emotion''. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998. ISBN 069105875X
 +
* Frischer, Bernard. ''The Sculpted Word: Epicureanism and Philosophical Recruitment in Ancient Greece''. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1982. ISBN 0520041909
 +
* Furley, David. ''Two Studies in the Greek Atomists''. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0691623443
 +
* Gerson, L. P. and Brad Inwood (trans. and eds.). ''The Epicurus Reader''. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing, 1994. ISBN 0872202410
 +
* Gosling, J. C. B. and C. C. W. Taylor. ''The Greeks on Pleasure''. New York: Oxford University Press (Clarendon Press), 1982. ISBN 0198246668
 +
* Jones, Howard. ''The Epicurean Tradition'' London: Routledge, 1992. ISBN 0415075548
 +
* Long, A. A. ''Hellenistic Philosophy: Stoics, Epicureans, Skeptics''. Second edition. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1986. ISBN 0520058089
 +
* Long, A. A., and D. N. Sedley. ''The Hellenistic Philosophers Volume 1''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987. ISBN 0521275563
 +
* Mitsis, Phillip. ''Epicurus' Ethical Theory: The Pleasures of Invulnerability''. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1988. ISBN 080142187X
 +
* O'Connor, Eugene Michael (trans.). ''The Essential Epicurus: Letters, Principal Doctrines, Vatican Sayings, and Fragments''. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 1993. ISBN 0879758104
 +
* Rist, John. ''Epicurus: An Introduction''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1972. ISBN 052129200X
 +
* Warren, James. ''Epicurus and Democritean Ethics: An Archaeology of Ataraxia''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 0521813697
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
* [http://www.epicurus.info Epicurus.info - Epicurean Philosophy Online]
+
All links retrieved February 13, 2024.
* [http://www.epicurus.net Epicurus & Epicurean Philosophy]
+
 
* [http://www.myspot.org/epic/ The Epicurean Garden of Delight]
+
* [http://www.epicurus.net Epicurus & Epicurean Philosophy]  
* [http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EpicureanGroup/ The Epicurean Group]
 
  
== References ==
 
*A.A.Long & D.N.Sedley (1987). The Hellenistic Philosophers Volume 1, Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-27556-3
 
*Annas, Julia. ''The Morality of Happiness''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1993
 
*Cooper, John M.  “Pleasure and Desire in Epicurus.” In John M. Cooper, ''Reason and Emotion''. Princeton: Princeton University Pres, 1999
 
*Frischer, Bernard. ''The Sculpted Word: Epicureanism and Philosophical Recruitment in Ancient Greece''. Berkeley: University of California Press. 1982
 
*Furley, David. ''Two Studies in the Greek Atomists''. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 1967
 
*Gerson, L. P. and Inwood, Brad, translated and edited by. ''The Epicurus Reader''. Indianapolis. Hackett Publishing. 1994
 
*Gosling, J.C.B. and C.C.W. Taylor. ''The Greeks on Pleasure''. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 1982
 
*Jones, Howard, ''The Epicurean Tradition'' (Routledge, 1992)
 
*Long, A. A., ''Hellenistic Philosophy: Stoics, Epicureans, Skeptics'' (California, 1986)
 
*Mitsis, Phillip. ''Epicurus' Ethical Theory: The Pleasures of Invulnerability''. Ithaca NY: Cornell University Press. 1988
 
*O'Connor, Eugene Michael.  ''The Essential Epicurus: Letters, Principal Doctrines, Vatican Sayings, and Fragments'', (Prometheus, 1993)
 
*Rist, John. ''Epicurus: An Introduction''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1972
 
*Warren, James, ''Epicurus and Democritean Ethics: An Archaeology of Ataraxia'' (Cambridge, 2002)
 
 
===General Philosophy Sources===
 
===General Philosophy Sources===
*[http://www.epistemelinks.com/  Philosophy Sources on Internet EpistemeLinks]
 
*[http://plato.stanford.edu/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
 
*[http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/gpi/index.htm Guide to Philosophy on the Internet]
 
*[http://www.bu.edu/wcp/PaidArch.html Paideia Project Online]
 
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/ The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
 
*[http://www.gutenberg.org/ Project Gutenberg]
 
{{Link FA|pl}}
 
  
[[Category:Philosophical movements]]
+
*[http://plato.stanford.edu/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]  
[[Category:Ethics]]
+
*[http://www.bu.edu/wcp/PaidArch.html Paideia Project Online]  
[[Category:Ancient Rome]]
+
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/ The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]  
[[Category:Secularism]]
+
*[http://www.gutenberg.org/ Project Gutenberg]  
[[Category:Ancient Greece]]
+
 
 
[[category:philosophy and religion]]
 
[[category:philosophy and religion]]
  
{{credit|47294861}}
+
{{Credit2|Epicurus|47233464|Epicureanism|47294861}}

Latest revision as of 19:06, 13 February 2024


Marble bust of Epicurus. Roman copy of Greek original, third century B.C.E./second century B.C.E. On display in the British Museum, London.

Epicureanism is a system of philosophy based upon the teachings of Epicurus (c. 340–c. 270 B.C.E.), and was one of the most popular schools of Hellenistic philosophy (together with Platonism and Stoicism). It was founded around 307 B.C.E., when Epicurus began to teach. He proposed that the ultimate goal of human life was happiness, and that the greatest good was to seek modest pleasures in order to attain a state of tranquility and freedom from fear through knowledge ("ataraxia") as well as absence of pain ("aponia"). He also encouraged the study of science as a way to overcome fear and ignorance and thus achieve mental calmness. Epicurus developed a naturalist explanation of existence, combined with a system of ethics meant to guide society towards peace and tranquility. He put forth an atomist ontology, empiricist epistemology, and humanistic ethics.

Epicurus set up several communities that tried to lead a philosophical life according to his ethics. Epicureans grasped that sensuous pleasure is an important constituent of human happiness, but only when it is integrated with spiritual and ethical aspects, since all human experiences are essentially holistic spiritual-physical experiences. Although the modern terms “epicure” and “epicurean” imply self-indulgent hedonism, Epicurus advocated moderation and pointed out that over-indulgence of any kind results in pain and therefore should be avoided.

Epicureanism remained popular for several centuries but never entered the mainstream of philosophical thought. One reason is that it was opposed by conservatives and later was suppressed by the Christian faith. Much later, some of its teachings would play a role in the Renaissance and influence modern thinkers, particularly in the areas of civic justice and the study of physics.

Epicureanism has contributed to modern thought in several important ways. One of these was the theory of “atomism” which was used by early physicists and chemists as they began to work out modern atomic theory. Epicureanism played a role in establishing the value of the individual when humanism arose as a backlash to religious authoritarianism. Another contribution was the idea that it is inherent in human nature to pursue happiness, and that an ethical society should allow every one of its members that opportunity. This idea was expanded on during the French Revolution and by thinkers like John Locke. The "pursuit of happiness" was incorporated into the United States Declaration of Independence as an inalienable right.

Epicurean ethics continue to appeal. An ethical system based on maximizing "pleasure," similar to the tenet of utilitarianism, seems to transcend barriers of culture, faith and language at a time when the world is becoming a global community.

The School

Epicurus set up his first Epicurean community in Mytilene, where he met Hermarchus, his first disciple and later his successor as head of the Athenian school. Threatened with imprisonment because of a dispute with a local official, he moved to Lampsacus, where he met Metrodorus and Polyaenus, Metrodorus’ brother Timocrates, Leonteus and his wife Themista, the satirist Colotes, and Metrodorus’ sister Batis and her husband Idomeneus, and set up a second community. In the archonship of Anaxicrates (307 B.C.E. - 306 B.C.E.), he returned to Athens where he formed The Garden (Ho Kepus), a school named for the house and garden he owned about halfway between the Stoa and the Academy that served as the school's meeting place. An inscription on the gate to the garden is recorded by Seneca in his Epistle XXI: “Stranger, here you will do well to tarry; here our highest good is pleasure.” Unlike the other Athenian schools of Plato and Aristotle, Epicurus’ school admitted women and slaves. These communities set out to live the ideal Epicurean lifestyle, detaching themselves from political society, and devoting themselves to philosophical discourse and the cultivation of friendship. The letters, which members of these communities wrote to each other, were collected by later Epicureans and studied as a model of the philosophical life.

The Tetrapharmacon, preserved by Philodemus, sums up the teachings of Epicurus: “The gods are not to be feared. Death is not a thing one must fear. Good is easy to obtain. Evil is easy to tolerate.”

In his will Epicurus left the house and garden and some funds to the trustees of the school, and upon his death, Hemarchus became his successor. Polystratus, who was the last surviving member of the school to have personally known Epicurus, followed him. The Garden continued to exist in some form for several centuries, until all four Athenian schools were closed by the Emperor Justinian in 529 C.E.

Writings

Epicurus’ writing was said to fill 300 rolls, and at least 42 of his works, including the 37 books of On Nature, were circulated at the time, as well as 12 books by Metrodorus and four by Polyaenus. Only fragments of Epicurus’s prolific manuscripts remain, including three epitomes (Letter to Herodotus on physics, Letter to Pythocles on astronomy, and the Letter to Menoeceus on ethics); a group of forty maxims, mostly on ethics; and papyrus fragments of his masterwork, On Nature. Many of the details of Epicurean philosophy come to us from doxographers—secondary sources and the writings of later followers. In Rome, Titus Lucretius Carus (99 or 94-55 B.C.E.) was the school's greatest proponent, composing On the Nature of Things, an epic poem, in six books, designed to recruit new members, which offers detailed instruction on several Epicurean theories, including atomism, infinity, mortality, fear of death, fear of the gods, and sensation and the torments of desire. Epicureanism came under attack from Cicero, whose critiques of Epicurean arguments actually served to preserve them for posterity. An ancient source is Diogenes of Oenoanda (c. 2 C.E.) who composed a large inscription in stone at Oenoanda in Lycia.

A library, dubbed the Villa of the Papyri, in Herculaneum, owned by Julius Caesar's father-in-law, Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus, was preserved by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 C.E., and was found to contain a large number of works by Philodemus, a late Hellenistic Epicurean, and Epicurus himself, attesting to the school's enduring popularity more than 300 years after his death. The task of unrolling and deciphering the charred papyrus scrolls, begun in the 1700s, continues today.

Epicureanism in Greek and Roman periods

Epicureanism grew in popularity and it became, along with Stoicism and Skepticism, one of the three dominant schools of Hellenistic philosophy, maintaining a strong following until the late Roman Empire. It never entered the mainstream of ancient political life, partly because it was highly critical of everything that did not advance the “greater good” according to Epicureanism. However it continued to be an important influence for several centuries.

Epicureans of the second century B.C.E. include Demetrius of Lacon, and Apollodorus, who wrote 400 books. His disciple, Zeno of Sidon, also wrote prolifically and was heard by Cicero in Athens in 79 B.C.E. Phaedrus, another of Cicero’s teachers, was in Rome in 90 B.C.E., and Patro was head of the school until 51 B.C.E.

De rerum natura manuscript

Surviving fragments of a first century B.C.E. treatise, On Signs, by Philodemus, show that there were sophisticated debates on induction between Epicureans and Stoics. The first person to write about Epicureanism in Latin was Amafinius. Titus Lucretius Carus wrote De rerum natura (On the Nature of Things) during the first century B.C.E. Epicureanism and became well established in Italy in the first century C.E., under the patronage of Roman aristocrats. After the assassination of Julius Caesar, Epicureanism became unpopular among the Roman governmental elite, but flourished in other parts of the Roman Empire, such as Turkey, where in the second century C.E., Diogenes of Oenoanda carved Epicurean texts on a stone wall. Fragments of a polemic against the Stoic Chrysippus by Diogenianus, another Epicurean of the second century C.E., are found in The History of the Church by Eusebius (263-339 C.E.).

Epicurus' theory that the gods were unconcerned with human affairs had always clashed strongly with the Judeo-Christian concept of a monotheistic God, and the philosophies were essentially irreconcilable. In Talmudic literature, the word for a heretic is "Apikouros." Epicureanism was routinely attacked in Christian texts of the mid-second century C.E. Lactantius criticizes Epicurus at several points throughout his Divine Institutes. With the growing dominance of Christianity when the Emperor Constantine declared it legal, and especially after Emperor Theodosius I declared it the official religion of the Roman Empire in the third century C.E., Epicureanism declined. For several centuries the only fragments of Epicureanism to be remembered in Europe were those that the church chose to preserve.

Epicureanism Since Modern Times

In the fifteenth century, intellectuals began to take an interest in the Greek and Roman classics, and Italian humanists began circulating translations of classical works. In 1414, Poggio Bracciolini rediscovered Lucretius’ epic, On the Nature of Things, in a German monastery and sent a copy to Italy. It was published in 1473, after the invention of the printing press.

Epicureanism was revived as a philosophical thought system in the seventeenth century by Pierre Gassendi, who constructed a neo-Epicurean atomism to challenge Descartes’ theories. Gassendi’s works influenced several English intellectuals, including John Locke, Isaac Newton, Robert Boyle, and Robert Hooke. Epicurean ideas helped lay the foundations for the theory of modern physics, chemistry and astronomy, and contributed to classical liberalism in political theory and atomistic empiricism in philosophy. Newton included 90 lines from On the Nature of Things in his writings on the concept of inertia. The transition, during the Period of Enlightenment, from superstition, alchemy, and political and religious authoritarianism to modern science and physics, religious freedom and democracy, owes a great deal to the teachings of Epicurus.

Epicurus was one of the first thinkers to develop the notion of justice as a social contract. He defined justice as an agreement "neither to harm nor be harmed." The point of living in a society with laws and punishments is to be protected from harm so that one is free to pursue happiness. Because of this, laws that do not help contribute to promoting human happiness are not just. This was later picked up by the democratic thinkers of the French Revolution, and others, like John Locke, who wrote that people had a right to "life, liberty, and property." To Locke, one's own body was part of their property, and thus one's right to property would theoretically guarantee safety for their persons, as well as their possessions. This triad was carried forward into the American freedom movement and Declaration of Independence by American founding father Thomas Jefferson as "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." Jefferson was an avowed Epicurean in his later years, and set out his views in his Letter to William Short.

Karl Marx's doctoral thesis was on "The Difference Between the Democritean and Epicurean Philosophy of Nature." Epicurus was also a significant source of inspiration and interest for Friedrich Nietzsche. Nietzsche cites his affinities to Epicurus in a number of his works, including The Gay Science, Beyond Good and Evil, and his private letters to Peter Gast.

Epicurus' doctrines continue to have a general appeal to modern intellectuals, as evidenced by a recent revival of Epicurean-oriented individualism in political and philosophical thought, as well as in pop culture. Jeremy Bentham and others developed utilitarianist ethical theory based upon the idea of maximizing pleasure. We can see conceptual affinity between Epicureanism and utilitarianism, one of the most popular ethics today.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Annas, Julia. The Morality of Happiness. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993. ISBN 0195096525
  • Cooper, John M. “Pleasure and Desire in Epicurus.” In John M. Cooper, Reason and Emotion. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998. ISBN 069105875X
  • Frischer, Bernard. The Sculpted Word: Epicureanism and Philosophical Recruitment in Ancient Greece. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1982. ISBN 0520041909
  • Furley, David. Two Studies in the Greek Atomists. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0691623443
  • Gerson, L. P. and Brad Inwood (trans. and eds.). The Epicurus Reader. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing, 1994. ISBN 0872202410
  • Gosling, J. C. B. and C. C. W. Taylor. The Greeks on Pleasure. New York: Oxford University Press (Clarendon Press), 1982. ISBN 0198246668
  • Jones, Howard. The Epicurean Tradition London: Routledge, 1992. ISBN 0415075548
  • Long, A. A. Hellenistic Philosophy: Stoics, Epicureans, Skeptics. Second edition. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1986. ISBN 0520058089
  • Long, A. A., and D. N. Sedley. The Hellenistic Philosophers Volume 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987. ISBN 0521275563
  • Mitsis, Phillip. Epicurus' Ethical Theory: The Pleasures of Invulnerability. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1988. ISBN 080142187X
  • O'Connor, Eugene Michael (trans.). The Essential Epicurus: Letters, Principal Doctrines, Vatican Sayings, and Fragments. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 1993. ISBN 0879758104
  • Rist, John. Epicurus: An Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1972. ISBN 052129200X
  • Warren, James. Epicurus and Democritean Ethics: An Archaeology of Ataraxia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 0521813697

External links

All links retrieved February 13, 2024.

General Philosophy Sources

Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.